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John Howe's avatar

Perhaps some guidance about how you (the professor) prefer to be addressed, e.g., by first name, Professor, or Dr. I always preferred (retired now) "Professor" because it best captures the relationship I have with the students. "Dr." strikes me as a bit arrogant and reflects a past acomplishment (earning my PhD). And the use of first name ignores the power dynamic of the relationship (as you note).

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Thomas Main's avatar

Great list; so helpful. A big part of #1, I think, is committing to the idea of the newness and freshness of a “day one.”Whenever I’m in a TSA line at an airport, I will study an agent whose attitude I recognize. They will have the “ffs, how many times do I have to tell you to [ ]?” approach, when of course the target of the frustration is a person who just arrived at the airport. Sure the agent has said a hundred times that everyone needs to remove their coats, but they’ve told THIS person only once, or maybe twice. Of course I know that feeling, “ffs, I’ve been saying this for 25 years and you still don’t know impleaders?!?” But of course the students in your class just arrived. To help me clear-the-decks, hit reset, start anew, I wish I could receive some sort of an overview of my class that would remind me of its uniqueness. My fantasy is a one-page AI-generated biography (drawn from the students’ admissions applications, transcripts, CVs, and social media accounts) that would be tailored to remind me of the uniqueness of this cohort. It would be an anonymized mix of personal and professional achievements and challenges and dreams. Thus would help remind me of what an extraordinary privilege and honor it is — not only to be a professor, but to be the professor for THIS group on this subject.

Thanks for this great Substack. My favorite! Sincerely, Thom

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